Franklin Reflects on Winning UFC 185-lb. Title

ATLANTIC CITY, New Jersey, June 5 — “As of right now, there’s not
much that I can do,” Rich
Franklin told Sherdog.com after winning the UFC 185-pound title
Saturday night. “My hands are messed up. I can’t hit a bag. I’m
having a hard time even doing things like opening water
bottles.”

One can only imagine how Evan
Tanner must feel after being picked apart by the new champion.
After dropping his challenger with a straight right midway through
round one, the Oregonian couldn’t close the deal. Franklin hung on,
quickly seized control again and never let go.

Like a UFC version of Jake LaMotta, Tanner endured a varied,
relentless punishment ranging from fast combinations to roundhouse
kicks to the head. While he never lost his ability to defend or
even damage, there were no cries of “premature stoppage” from his
camp this time.

Both eyes swollen, left cheek swollen, bleeding from the left eye,
Tanner was, to put it mildly, a wreck. His post-fight interview
with Joe Rogan was mercifully short, and soon afterwards it was off
to the hospital.

Meanwhile, Franklin — the self-proclaimed “guy from a small town in
Ohio who couldn’t start on his high school football team” — put off
his own treatment for a moment to talk to the Sherdog team.

Judging by how levelheaded he was about reaching the pinnacle of
MMA, we got the impression that there would be no Shonie Carter-style pimp juice
parties tonight. No, we’d bet that if he could, Franklin would pick
up right where he left off, and get back to work.

Sherdog.com: You mentioned what a long haul it’s been for you —
your nine-month absence from the UFC and your doubts about ever
getting back to the Octagon. How does it feel now?

Rich
Franklin: The same thing was asked of me after I beat Ken Shamrock. Now I’m the
middleweight champion and as far as I’m concerned, it’s just
another fight. I’ll be fighting again in probably four or five
months; it’s another stepping-stone in my career.

Sherdog.com: Having already knocked Tanner out early the last time,
your approach seemed to be a little more methodical this time
around. Almost like you wanted to take him into deep water and
drown him, which is what happened. Was that the plan going in?

Franklin: The strategy from my perspective
was the same — only I got clipped, so some things about the fight
are foggy for me. If you look at the way I fought Evan Tanner the first time, I was
methodical about the combinations I picked, the counterpunching
that I did, it’s just that from his end he wasn’t prepared to
handle me as a southpaw. So it looked a lot easier. I clipped him
nice in the first round and just capitalized on it. Basically, I
tried to do the same thing tonight; it just took longer because he
was doing a better job on his end.

Sherdog.com: He seemed like he couldn’t handle your speed.

Franklin: It’s not necessarily the speed or
the reflexes — it’s just that his stand-up is just not as refined
as mine.

Sherdog.com: At what point did you feel like, “I’ve got him?”

Franklin: To me, I honestly thought I was
doing a good job of being in control in the first round, and then I
got dropped. So I didn’t know, really, at what point I’d taken over
the fight until I cut his eye open. When I put the cut over his
left eye, I knew at that point he was in deep trouble.

Sherdog.com: So now you’re a coach as well as a champion. What’s
your game plan for TUF II?

Franklin: While I’ll definitely miss my team,
I know I’m gonna have a great time. After I heal up over the next
week or two I can hopefully start training with the guys when I’m
out there.

Sherdog.com: You mentioned earlier that winning the middleweight
title was just another steppingstone in your career. But now you’re
at the top. So what’s the next mountain for you to climb?

Franklin: Great fighters defend titles. Good
ones get it. Great ones defend it.